Rangers: Hutton makes Kamara claim

Rangers could be set to receive a substantial fee should they decide to sell midfielder Glen Kamara this summer, according to former Scotland defender Alan Hutton.

The lowdown: Agreement in place

This comes following an initial report from Football Insider claiming that the Ibrox club are ‘willing to listen to offers’ for Kamara during the upcoming transfer window.

It was claimed that ‘sources’ close to the Teddy Bears have confirmed that there is an ‘agreement’ between the club and the 26-year-old that a move will materialise at a certain price after Aston Villa were previously linked when Steven Gerrard took the Premier League job.

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Now, as the end of the season fast approaches, one heavily connected Gers man has had his say…

The latest: Hutton makes ‘huge’ claim

Speaking to Football Insider, regular Rangers TV pundit Hutton has outlined what it would take to prize Kamara away this summer, calling his initial move to Ibrox ‘laughable’.

The 37-year-old said: “As important to the club as he is, I think it has to be £10million, round about that. Some people might think that’s huge, but in terms of what it gives to the team and what it has done, he’s pivotal to what Rangers do.

“He has had times where he’s been a little bit up and down and started from the bench. But every time he comes on he proves his worth to the team. I think £10million is a good number, in my opinion. Especially in today’s market, if you look Nathan Patterson going for £16million. I know there’s a lot of potential there but we’re talking about a ready-made midfielder.

“He’s played at a high level already and Rangers did excellently well to get him for £50,000. An absolute steal, it’s laughable to see what he’s turned into. He’s only going to get better, he’s still a good age so definitely around that mark.”

The verdict: Big decision looms

Having missed out on an automatic place in next season’s UEFA Champions League group stages, the Light Blues hierarchy may look to make up some of the financial shortfalls with major player sales such as Kamara.

However, having scored four times and provided five assists in 51 appearances this season, featuring in 78 minutes per Scottish Premiership game on average (Sofascore), the Finland international remains just so integral to Giovanni van Bronckhorst’s side and therefore should only be sold at the very top of his valuation.

Under contract until 2025 (Transfermarkt), there is certainly no rush to cash in on the 42-cap ace and as such Rangers can afford to hold out for at least Hutton’s mooted £10million asking price.

In other news, find out what ‘massive blow’ Rangers have now been dealt here!

Tottenham: Bastoni may "emerge" as priority target

Tottenham target Alessandro Bastoni may “emerge” as the priority for the club during the upcoming summer transfer window…

What’s the story?

Speaking to GIVEMESPORT, transfer insider Dean Jones claimed: “I think there’s a good chance that Bastoni will emerge as the guy. At this stage, I keep being told there is no order at the moment, that they’ll see at the end of the season where they’re at and they’ll go from there.

“They have a shortlist, but it’s not in any sort of ranking, as it stands.”

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Perfect for Conte

Having been together during their time at Inter, Bastoni would surely come into this Spurs side ready to meet Conte’s demands of playing as the left-sided centre-back in a back-three.

The Italian attempts 70.9 passes per game, which puts him in the top 5% of centre-backs in Serie A, while his score score of 94 out of 99 for defending intensity, i.e. how active he is in his defensive approach, is an impressive snapshot of how aggressive he likes to be.

A piece from The Athletic revealed: “When Conte arrived at Inter in 2019, Bastoni was a 20-year-old who had not yet played for the first team having spent the previous season out on loan at Parma. But Conte wanted to build with Bastoni, so he was in the Inter squad for the 2019-20 season, and Bastoni was thrilled. It did not take long for him to say that Conte was ‘the Messi of coaches’, praising his ‘exceptional football ideas’.”

Predominantly left-footed as well, the Italian is reminiscent of Spurs’ former ball-playing colossus Jan Vertonghen, with talent scout Jacek Kulig noting that the 23-year-old is a “complete, dominant and elegant” defender, while adding last year: “Fantastic young centre-back with some superb ball skills. Perfect to play in a three-man defence. Antonio Conte’s talisman.”

Valued at £60m by CIES, Bastoni and Conte could rekindle their partnership from Inter in north London, and enjoy the same kind of success they did there.

AND in other news – Spurs plot record-breaking swoop for £100m-rated “tank”, Conte will be buzzing

Lions batsmen crash Kohli's party

24-Apr-2016AB de Villiers got going with a couple of cover-driven fours•BCCIHis promising innings ended when Pravin Tambe had him caught at short cover•BCCIVirat Kohli continued to pierce the gaps with ease…•BCCI…despite an ankle sprain•BCCIKL Rahul, a last-minute replacement for the injured Mandeep Singh, contributed 51 in an 121-run stand with Kohli•BCCIKohli shifted gears and scored his maiden T20 century off 63 balls. Royal Challengers finished with 180 for 2•AFPDwayne Smith, opening in place of the injured Aaron Finch, got Lions’ chase to a flier•BCCIBrendon McCullum also found his bearings right away•AFPThe 47-run partnership ended when Kane Richardson dismissed Smith for 32. Three overs later, South African chinaman bowler Tabraiz Shamsi removed McCullum for 42•BCCISuresh Raina and Dinesh Karthik kept Lions on course with a third-wicket stand of 53•BCCIRaina fell for 28 in the 16th over, but Dinesh Karthik held his own and brought up his first T20 half-century after 21 innings•BCCIWith three needed off four balls, Dwayne Bravo struck a four to seal Lions’ fourth win. He celebrated the victory with the dance•BCCI

Most expensive Pakistani bowler

Stats highlights from the second ODI between New Zealand and Pakistan, in Napier

Shiva Jayaraman03-Feb-20154 Number of scores higher than the 369 that New Zealand hit in this match in ODIs. The highest they have scored in ODIs is 402 for 2, against Ireland in 2008. New Zealand’s total today is their highest against any team other than Ireland and Zimbabwe. This is also the fourth-highest total scored in ODIs in New Zealand.12 Number of fifty-plus scores Kane Williamson has managed in just 18 innings since the beginning of 2014. During this time he has got out without scoring at least 40 only four times. Only Sangakkara has hit more fifty-plus scores during this period. Williamson has scored 2452 runs at an average of 46.26 from his 60 ODI innings. While in his first 30 innings he had hit 827 runs at a modest average of 31.80, his last 30 innings have produced 1625 runs at an average of 60.18.

Kane Williamson – career split
Runs Ave SR 100s/50s
First 30 inns 827 31.80 74.37 2/3
Last 30 inns 1625 60.18 87.83 4/12
Career 2452 46.26 82.78 6/15

66.63 Ross Taylor’s average against Pakistan in ODIs – his best against any of the Test teams. This was Taylor’s third century against Pakistan, which is also the most he has hit against any team. Taylor was playing his 150th ODI, becoming only the 12th New Zealand player to do so.0 Number of times New Zealand’s Nos. 3 and 4 had both scored hundreds in the same ODI before this match. They had come closest to achieving this way back in 1994-95, when Adam Parore got out for 96 batting at No. 3, with Ken Rutherford getting his century at No. 4 against India.93 Runs conceded by Bilawal Bhatti in this match; this equals the most any Pakistani bowler has conceded in an ODI. Wahab Riaz had also conceded 93 against South Africa in 2013.15 Boundaries conceded by Bhatti in this match – the most any Pakistani bowler has conceded in an ODI since 2001. Five of those boundaries were sixes, which equals the most sixes any Pakistani bowler has conceded in ODIs since 2001.18.80 Younis Khan’s batting average in ODIs in Australia and New Zealand. He has hit only one fifty in 16 innings in these countries, back in 2002 against Australia.0 Number of times Pakistan’s openers had put up a century partnership while chasing a target of 300 or more before this match. The highest their first wicket had added was 97 against Bangladesh in the Asia Cup last year.

Titans sign Gibbs for semi-final

Titans have signed Herschelle Gibbs for their semi-final against Warriors on Wednesday

Firdose Moonda02-Apr-2013Herschelle Gibbs last played alongside AB de Villiers more than three years ago. Since then de Villiers has been elevated to South Africa’s one-day captaincy, he is their wicketkeeper and the No. 3 and joint No. 1 batsman in the Test and ODI rankings.Gibbs, on the other hand, went freelance and played for teams ranging from Khulna Royal Bengals in the Bangladesh Premier League to Perth Scorchers in the Big Bash, and annoyed the establishment with his tell-all biography. In it Gibbs claimed de Villiers was part of a clique of players that controlled the national team. However, he will have to bury the hatchet when he wears the light blue Titans kit and goes in to bat for the team de Villiers has played for his whole life, against Warriors in the Ram Slam T20 Challenge semi-final.The bad boy of South African cricket is coming back, in the least expected way. Always a Cape Town boy, Gibbs has gone cross-country to play in Centurion. Titans shelled out an undisclosed amount of big money to secure his services – even though it could amount to only one game.They are hoping for an explosive performance to ensure they qualify for the lucrative Champions League T20. For that to happen, Titans must win their knockout match against Warriors in East London to reach Sunday’s domestic T20 final. Both teams in that fixture, Lions having already secured their spot, will be granted automatic entry into the CL T20 main draw by virtue of South Africa’s shareholder status.Should Titans get there, it is unlikely Gibbs will play for them in the Champions League. Perth Scorchers are already confirmed participants, having finished runners-up of the Big Bash, and will probably have first rights to him. But that does not matter right now.The immediate goal is to win the play-off and, despite having internationals Morne Morkel, de Villiers and Farhaan Behardien available, Titans felt they needed some extra oomph.If there were any concerns about Gibbs and de Villiers getting along, some of them were eased when Gibbs ran into the South African squad in their hotel in Perth late last year. He was there preparing for the Big Bash, and South Africa had just won the series against Australia. Gibbs remembered having a brief chat with some of them and indicated a lot of the issues had been cleared.”Professional sportsmen get paid to play,” Jacques Faul, chief executive of the Titans, told ESPNcricinfo. “We want them all to be happy and to be a team but at the end of the day we select a group of skilled players and we need the professionalism to match that skill.” Matthew Maynard, who first encountered Gibbs at Glamorgan, believes the opener has enough of both to make a big impact.Maynard was courting Gibbs from the beginning of the season but a hamstring injury interrupted their negotiations. When Scott Styris became unavailable for Titans for the crucial rounds, Maynard tried Gibbs again and, having healed fully, he agreed to join them.Gibbs has not played competitively since January and he has never played in the Titans set-up but Maynard is not worried about that. He sees Gibbs as highly adaptable because of the amount of moving around he has done in T20 leagues around the world.”Everything Herschelle does is 100 miles per hour. He moves like a 20-year old, not a man who is in his late thirties,” Maynard said. “He reminds me a lot of Viv Richards in that sense. The impact he can have on the dressing room is a factor as well because he’s an incredibly positive person.”Even his patchy performance for the Scorchers is not something that perturbs Maynard. “His form doesn’t concern me at all. When you are a player like Herschelle, you’ve probably hit 70,000 balls in your career. He won’t have much to think about – just a see it and hit it philosophy, and sometimes a break can work very well.”It’s tough to expect him to come in and strike an 85 off 50 balls. If he did do that, it would be very nice, but I signed him because of his energy in the field, his impact on the dressing room and his ability with the bat. It’s a lot more than just runs, it’s more about the character. And he has a lot of character.”His spark has been missing from South African fields for 13 months, when Gibbs last appeared in a domestic match. New talent is being unearthed at domestic level, which made it difficult for Cobras to hang on to Gibbs.The heady days and nights of his fearless knocks have faded to the back of the cricket consciousness here but Titans hope they can bring it back, even if it’s just for one night. “It’s sad that he doesn’t play anymore,” Faul said. “He is a real talent, especially in T20 leagues.”East London will witness that on Wednesday and maybe Gibbs will appear at the Wanderers again if he takes Titans to the final.

India's bouncebackability

India have a poor record in the first Tests of series, but their second-Test numbers are remarkably better

S Rajesh26-Jul-2011Another first Test in an overseas series, and another defeat for this Indian team. While there were admittedly several factors that went against India at Lord’s – the injuries to Zaheer Khan and Gautam Gambhir, and Sachin Tendulkar’s illness all severely affected the team – the fact remains that they were outclassed, and now need to mount yet another comeback to draw level. The only positive, perhaps, is that India would be used to this scenario, since they have faced it five times on their last seven tours (excluding tours to Bangladesh) all within the last four years. Between 2003 and 2007, there were six successive series when India had avoided that fate (twice in Pakistan, and once each in Australia, West Indies, South Africa and England), but the first-Test bug has hit them hard since, with defeats in Australia, Sri Lanka (twice), South Africa, and now in England. (Click here for India’s overseas Test results since 2001.)MS Dhoni can also draw some hope from the fact that the first Test will be followed by the second Test. That’s stating the obvious, but historically their performances in second Tests have been huge improvements on the first. Over the last decade, and excluding tours to Zimbabwe and Bangladesh, India have a 4-9 win-loss record in first Tests of away series, with the four wins coming in Pakistan, South Africa, New Zealand and West Indies. In second Tests, on the other hand, they’ve won six times and lost only four, which means their win-loss ratio in second Tests is almost three-and-a-half times times their first-Test ratio.Overall, second Tests seem to conjure much happier memories for India, with wins in Kandy (2001), Port of Spain (2002), Adelaide (2003), Trent Bridge (2007), Galle (2008) and Durban (2010). Twice in the last three years, India have bounced back to win the second Test after losing the first – in Sri Lanka in 2008, and in South Africa last year. They promptly lost the third Test in that Sri Lanka series, but in South Africa they drew the third Test in Cape Town to ensure the series ended 1-1. Of the eight previous occasions when they’ve lost the first Test overseas since 2001, India have lost the series five times and drawn it thrice. More encouragingly, they’ve drawn the last two such instances, in Sri Lanka (in 2010) and South Africa.Coming back to the current series, it also helps that the venue for the second Test is again Trent Bridge, a ground where they beat England by seven wickets in 2007.

India in 1st Tests and other Tests overseas, since 2001*
Matches Won Lost Drawn
First Tests 18 4 9 5
Second Tests 17 6 4 7
Third Tests 15 4 6 5
Overall 56 15 20 21

A look at the stats for India’s top batsmen in each Test of these series reveal that most of them have been at their best in the second Test. The difference has been especially stark for VVS Laxman. He has historically struggled in the opening Test: his overall first-Test average is 36.69, with only one century and 16 half-centuries. In overseas Tests in the last decade, Laxman’s story has been one of getting starts and not converting them into significant scores: out of 30 innings, he has gone past 20 on 21 occasions, yet he has managed only seven half-centuries, and no hundreds at all. In second Tests, he has turned it around completely, with three hundreds in 28 innings and an average of almost 60. His last seven second-Test innings read thus: 76, 124 not out, 29, 38, 96, 85 and 87.The difference in averages for Gautam Gambhir is huge too, but the sample size is much smaller for him: Gambhir has only played two away second Tests for that average of 70.75. The numbers are fairly even across the three Tests for Rahul Dravid, but Sachin Tendulkar and Virender Sehwag both have very strong first-Test stats. For Tendulkar, the average drops into the 40s in the second and third Tests, while Sehwag’s drop is significant in the third Test, which is when he is expected to return to the team.

India’s top batsmen in each Test of an overseas series since Jan 2001*
Batsman 1st Tests/ Ave 100s/ 50s 2nd Tests/ Ave 100s/ 50s 3rd Tests/ Ave 100s/ 50s
Gautam Gambhir 5/ 34.22 0/ 2 2/ 70.75 1/ 2 3/ 74.16 1/ 3
Virender Sehwag 12/ 59.42 4/ 2 12/ 55.26 3/ 3 11/ 34.15 2/ 1
Rahul Dravid 18/ 47.55 4/ 5 17/ 51.24 4/ 8 15/ 49.00 2/ 6
Sachin Tendulkar 15/ 54.63 4/ 4 14/ 44.20 3/ 4 12/ 42.19 2/ 5
VVS Laxman 17/ 35.14 0/ 7 16/ 59.67 3/ 10 14/ 47.33 2/ 8

Most of the focus for the poor first-Test results has usually been on the batsmen, but India’s leading spin bowler’s stats in series openers are abysmal. In his entire career, Harbhajan Singh has taken only 30 wickets in 14 first Tests overseas (excluding one-off Tests), at an average of 60.40 and a strike-rate of 108 balls per wicket. In overseas first Tests since 2001, in countries other than Zimbabwe and Bangladesh, his average is almost 68. In his last four such Tests his figures read thus: 0 for 98 and 0 for 24 in Galle; 2 for 169 in Centurion; 2 for 51 and 1 for 54 in Kingston; and 0 for 152 and 1 for 66 at Lord’s – a total of six wickets for 614 runs, an average of 102.33. The good news is that his numbers improve significantly in the second and third Tests, but he has been guilty of throwing away the initiative in the series opener repeatedly.In 14 away first Tests, Harbhajan has taken only one five-for – 6 for 63 in Hamilton in 2009. He had match figures of 7 for 120 in that game, which means that excluding that match, Harbhajan averages 73.56 per wicket in first Tests abroad.There’s no doubt that he usually lifts his game deeper into the series – in South Africa last year he took 4 for 10 in Durban and 7 for 120 in Cape Town after a similarly ordinary start to the series. An encore of those performances would suit India just fine.

Harbhajan in each Test of a series
1st Tests/ Wkts Ave/ SR 2nd Test/ Wkts Ave/ SR 3rd Tests/ Wkts Ave/ SR
Away, since 2001* 11/ 22 67.90/ 114.3 12/ 39 39.58/ 77.7 8/ 39 28.30/ 64.1
Away, overall 14/ 30 60.40/ 108.1 17/ 51 39.31/ 78.5 8/ 39 28.30/ 64.1

Two up, four down

Ireland and Scotland fared well, while Bermuda, Kenya, Canada and Netherlands plumbed the depths

Will Luke04-Jan-2009

Among Scotland’s highs was defeating Lancashire in the Friends Provident Trophy © PA Photos
Ireland Ireland may continue to leak their best players to England, but out of all the Associate nations they seem the most organised, and 2008 proved to be a promising year all round. However, like Scotland, their involvement in the Friends Provident Trophy has been a learning curve and not much more, though the two sides’ inclusion in a major domestic tournament causes green-eyed envy from the likes of Kenya, who are virtually ignored by their nearest neighbours South Africa.Ireland’s greatest achievement was their third successive victory in the ICC Intercontinental Cup, the biggest event in Associate cricket. As Kenya’s coach, Andy Kirsten, told Cricinfo in August, “It’s the closest to a Test match they’ll get” – albeit without the intensity. Nevertheless, Ireland have shown promise in all areas.With several players unavailable, such as Niall O’Brien, who has county commitments, the coach, Phil Simmons, was forced to pick young and cruelly inexperienced players such as Paul Stirling. He inevitably struggled, but the fact he has already played 19 matches for his country suggests Simmons and Ireland aren’t afraid to tip young players into the deep end. However, they will continue to miss the class of O’Brien and other county-contracted players as they look to qualify for the 2011 World Cup next year.Scotland The end-of-year news that three Scotland players were turning professional lent seasonal cheer to Scottish cricket, and 2008 was a mixed year north of the border. It began well, though.A tense two-run win over Lancashire in the Friends Provident Trophy in May demonstrated their determination to succeed in a professional tournament of quality teams and players.They cruised past the two worst Associates, Bermuda and Canada, with ease thanks to the growing development of their slow-left-armer, Ross Lyons. They finished a respectable fourth in the Intercontinental Cup and only trailed Kenya – apparently the leading Associate, though their crown is fast slipping – by 14 points.The highlight of the season ought to have been their match against England at The Grange. And it was, briefly – particularly for Gavin Hamilton who cracked 60 – until Scottish drizzle deemed it a dribbly draw. It was the sixth ODI out of ten held in Scotland to be a no-result. No amount of funding can fix the weather up north, but pleasingly Scotland’s prospects are far brighter.Bermuda A miserable and depressing year for Bermudan cricket. Allegations of drug use, syringes found in players’ dressing rooms and poor behaviour helped to tarnish an equally poor year in terms of results. They finished bottom of the Intercontinental Cup table with 26 points, behind the UAE and Canada. Their developmental side even lost to Argentina, one of the next generation of Affiliates hoping to make the next step up to Associate level. Given Bermuda’s experience, victory in the World Cricket League Americas tournament should have been secured comfortably, but they lost that too. Domestically, their season ended in a complete shambles when some teams (and even umpires) failed or forgot to turn up.They are grouped with Kenya, Netherlands, UAE, Denmark and one other in next year’s ICC World Cup Qualifier, and for all the optimism of Gus Logie, their coach, it is very difficult to see how 2009 will be much different. Their women’s side fared similarly poorly, reaching a comedic nadir when they were dismissed for just 13.Kenya The past year has not been easy for Kenya. They won just a single ODI, against Zimbabwe – a fine win, but once again it was Steve Tikolo who brought them victory, cracking a superb 102. Aside from that, they lost to Netherlands, Ireland (twice), and suffered two other heavy defeats to South Africa to cap a disappointingly poor year. So disappointing, in fact, that in November, Cricket Kenya launched an investigation into the decline in form and the management structure in an attempt to reverse their fortunes.In September, a virtually full-strength side was humiliated by a Pakistan XI in Mombasa, a match that followed Kenya’s dismal tour of Europe. The northern hemisphere’s traditionally soggy summer didn’t help, of course, but the results were consistently poor. In addition to being beaten by a club side, there were allegations by an opposition team of dissent and poor behaviour, and Kenya then failed to qualify for the 2009 World Twenty20 when Ireland rolled them for an abject 67 in Belfast.Whatever could go wrong did go wrong; even the former KCA Chairman, Sharad Ghai, offered his two pennies with a predictably vitriolic attack on the domestic structure, though his comments were laced with bitterness, since he was ousted in 2005.The one bright spot came with the appearance of Seren Waters, a prodigiously talented batsman who made 41 on his debut, followed by 74 in a full ODI against South Africa. It seems inconceivable, however, that he won’t pledge his future to England; Surrey have already offered him an “emerging players” contract.

Kenya’s Seren Waters is one to watch out for © Martin Williamson
Canada A mixed bag of a year, where little or no progress was made on the pitch but bigger strides were made administratively. The board signed a huge deal with Scotiabank, sponsoring men and women players alike over three years. An encouraging sign for the future, particularly with Canada’s keenness to professionalise their administrative set-up – if not yet their cricketers, though that could happen sooner rather than later. Furthermore, cricket became officially recognised by the government, and over the next few years the sport ought to receive a slice of public funding, though like in many Associate nations, the game remains a minority-interest, and particularly in Canada’s case, is played mostly by first and second-generation immigrants.On the field, the T20 Canada tournament was mostly a logistical success – bar the odd missing visa or two – but Canada were far and away the weakest, finishing bottom. Even Zimbabwe managed to thrash them, as befits their – understandably questionable – status as a Full Member, leaving Canada with more questions than answers. Still, they signed a five-year deal to host similar events in the future, and only time will tell whether they can begin to challenge their own before taking on the heavies. Foundations are being made behind the scenes and, for now, that is a positive step forward.NetherlandsOf all the Associates, Netherlands are the ones most likely to be looking over their shoulder at the progress being made by the likes of Namibia and Afghanistan. Results have been poor for some time, but crucially, this year the board came under increasing pressure with a steady decline of players, which Andre van Troost, their former bowler-turned-chief executive, must tackle first.The lack of interest in cricket in the country is a serious concern for their status as an Associate, and having finished fifth in the ICC Intercontinental Cup – some 34 points behind fourth-placed Scotland – van Troost and his board have a lot of ground to make up. Compared to Ireland and Scotland, Netherlands simply don’t play enough games against quality opposition. Britain’s Associates are keenly involved in one-day county cricket, for example, and there would be little expectation that Netherlands could challenge even a second-division county side. With the World Cup Qualifiers taking place in just six months’ time, Dutch cricket has an awful lot to do to catch the others.

Root, Jaiswal take big strides in ICC Test rankings

Joe Root’s first century in England’s ongoing tour of India has lifted the batter to No. 3, while Yashasvi Jaiswal’s consistent scores have taken him to No. 12 on ICC’s rankings for Test batters.Root’s unbeaten 122 in the fourth Test, his first major contribution with the bat this series, lifted him two places and into the top three. His exploits as an offspinner have also moved him up to No. 4 among Test allrounders.For Jaiswal, now only two shy of the top ten, the rise has been meteoric. He started the Test series at No. 69 in the rankings, but in a matter of weeks, his 655 runs at an average of 93.57 in eight innings has seen him jump 57 steps to 12th. The batters’ rankings are still led by New Zealand’s Kane Williamson, with Australia’s Steven Smith at No. 2.

Full rankings tables

  • Click here for the full team rankings

  • Click here for the full player rankings

In the Test bowling rankings, world No. 2 R Ashwin has closed the distance between him and World No. 1 Jasprit Bumrah to only 21 rating points. After missing parts of the Rajkot Test for personal reasons, Ashwin took a second-innings five-wicket haul in Ranchi to set up India’s victory. Bumrah was rested. Behind the pair are Kagiso Rabada at third, with the Australian duo of Pat Cummins and Josh Hazlewood to follow.

Australians surge in T20Is

Hazlewood’s spell of 4-1-12-1 in Auckland against New Zealand has taken him six places up to No. 7 on the rankings for T20I bowlers. He is now the only Australian in the top 10 of the T20I bowling rankings, with England spinner Adil Rashid leading the way followed by the Sri Lankan pair of Wanindu Hasaranga and Maheesh Theekshana.Travis Head and Tim David have also gained positions among T20I batters. Head’s scores of 24, 45 and 33 elevated him 18 places up to 19th. Tim David’s 10-ball 31 in Australia’s final-ball win in the opening game of the series now sees him at a career-best 22nd. Suryakumar Yadav, Phil Salt and Mohammad Rizwan still hold the top three spots.

Scholtz makes history for Namibia

Bernard Scholtz’s six-wicket haul across two games at the League 2 tri-series in Nepal has taken him to 11th among ODI bowlers, a record high for Namibia. Scholtz’s slow left-arm orthodox spin earned him 4 for 31 against Nepal and 2 for 15 against Netherlands.Scholtz’s captain Gerhard Erasmus, meanwhile, is tied at No. 8 among ODI allrounders alongside Glenn Maxwell of Australia. Erasmus struck 52 against Nepal and took 3 for 33 against Netherlands to zoom eight places up and into the top ten.

Arsenal strike agreement with Bayer Leverkusen for Piero Hincapie transfer as loan with option deal worth €52m is reached

Arsenal have reached an agreement with Bayer Leverkusen to sign Piero Hincapie on a season-long loan with a €52m (£45m/$61m) option-to-buy clause.

  • Defender agrees five-year deal upon permanent transfer
  • Leverkusen hold 10% sell-on fee
  • Hincapie will travel to London for a medical this weekend
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    David Ornstein reports the 23-year-old defender will travel to London for a medical this weekend. Once the permanent transfer is completed, Hincapie will be signed to a five-year contract with the Gunners. Bayer Leverkusen will hold a 10% sell-on clause. 

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Arsenal have pursued a deal for the Ecuadorian for the past few weeks after the player was initially linked with their north London rivals Tottenham. The deal adds even more depth to a sturdy Arsenal back line, as Hincapie can fill in at both centre and left-back.

  • DID YOU KNOW?

    Hincapie joined Bayer Leverkusen from CA Telleres in 2021 for €13m. The Ecuadorian has progressed into a key player for Die Werkself, making 166 appearances over the past four seasons.

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    WHAT NEXT FOR HINCAPIE?

    The highly-rated defender will have to fight hard for game time, with Gabriel Magalhaes dominating the left centre-back spot in Mikel Arteta's starting lineup, while Riccardo Calafiori and Myles Lewis-Skelly have both performed admirably at left-back. Even if immediate game time is hard to come by, the long-term contract following Hincapie's permanent transfer suggests the 23-year-old is part of the club's plans well beyond this season.

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